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The First Years
Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, at the outset of
the Civil War decade, was a sleepy country town of no particular
consequence, and only about 5,500 people. However, at the close of
the 1860's, population had risen by nearly 300%,
totaling almost
16,000 souls.
What force effected this booming change? The lumber industry, of
course. Renewed exploitation of the rich forest in the
Susquehanna Valley caused an enormous spurt among the local
inhabitants, especially after the
1865 flood.
No such metamorphosis could occur without significant parallel
social development as well. Political and business life both were much
disturbed
by splits that opened up almost at once, between the generally
conservative
old families, who had manufactured lumber for long years using
time-tested
but antiquated methods, and the more progressive newcomers.
These new citizens were indeed a more venturesome breed. Their
arrival presaged a transition from gang saw to circular saw,
from canal boat
to railroad. Numerous new industries were spawned, usually
subsidiary to
the lumber boom, and operated mostly by newcomers. There was an
inflow
of expert machine operators from all parts of the country, in
particular New York State. Wage and salary levels jumped, and
general retail trade conditions improved.
Yet not without struggle. Since the "establishment" was unable
(more
likely simply unwilling) to provide the newcomers with adequate
risk capital,
the latter set up new and more liberal banking institutions.
Even old-line
churches felt the changes, since many of these people seemed to
hold more
liberal religious notions, or even no faith at all.
This resulted in a gradual but continuous multiplication of
churches
in Williamsport, and quite naturally the social life of our
community responded
to the division. Altogether, it was surely a yeasty era.
Williamsport is
still sometimes referred to as the "city of churches," and
contains far more
separate congregations than is usual for cities of our
size.
Factions among the citizens blocked efficient unity in welfare
and charity
work, especially after the disastrous 1865 flood. Not a little
of the trouble
arose from a clash of business attitudes, fanned by national
politics.
For Lycoming County in 1861-65 was undergoing a complete
political
reorientation. The Civil War stirred up
tremendous patriotic fervor, and prior
to that period
Williamsport had been largely Democratic. But with the
advent of Abraham
Lincoln on the national stage, and the re-election of
Governor and
Brother Andrew Gregg Curtin in Harrisburg, Republican
sentiment took
deep root. Then interest in civic affairs revived after the
end of
the war. Political debate raged in all the churches, many homes,
and nearly everywhere that there was a gathering. Party lines
ran deep.
Americans of a century ago took their democracy with great seriousness.
Nearly
every important crosscurrent of economic and social philosophy
spawned its own political expression. In such an atmosphere, Freemasonry
itself
was an active participant. The phenomenon even included
Anti-Masonic
political
parties, which put up candidates for state governorships and
even for the national presidency in the 1820's and 1830's.
Many references to this ferment are made by Brother Gilmore in
his
Anniversary History of Lodge No. 106. According to him, the late
Col.
Herbert Russell Laird said that "Ivy Lodge was organized because
there
was a feeling in Williamsport that a man couldn't get into Lodge
106 unless he was a Democrat."
Be this as it may, we also read that black balls
were dropped all too often in Lodge No. 106 during the War
years, reflecting
community influences quite foreign to Masonic grounds for
objections.
Thus it seems that Williamsport's personality was schizoid. It
needed
its newcomers badly, yet
irrationally it resented them. Yet were it not for
them and their mills, their better financial backing, their
passion for better government, and their new banks and churches,
Williamsport might well
have faded out of the picture.
It should now be apparent that the factors influencing the
establishment
of a new Masonic Lodge in 1867 were, at least, tangled. We must
consider clashes within Masonry itself. The new leaven in our
City significantly
affected Masonry. Most newcomers were formerly New Yorkers,
where they had become Masons, though not Ancient York Masons.
They belonged to the "Moderns," having rituals more dramatic in
character than
within the York Rite, yet the same in fundamentals. Though there
was sufficient
population to support two Lodges, and in spite of the other
areas of
friction referred to, the Moderns felt that their form of
Masonry was the
only correct one, and refused to give it up.
They would not accept Pennsylvania
work, and Pennsylvania Grand
Lodge behaved militantly toward them and
would not accept theirs. Grand
Masters in Pennsylvania gave no
opportunity for liberal concessions.
So a great debate raged. Which type
of Masonry was the desired new
Lodge to embrace? Would two small
Lodges be less advantageous to the
good of the Order here
than one powerful Lodge? Would a new Lodge bring
cooperation, or
simply competition? Would not one strong Lodge better protect
the Craft against the inroads of clandestine and spurious
organizations?
According to Brother Randall Prior,
long-time Secretary of Lodge No.
106, the presence here of
two types of Masonry was most responsible for
the delay in
setting up a new Lodge. Neither side would back down. The
Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, when approached for a Warrant to
set up
Ivy Lodge, made it clear that no such Warrant would issue except
that the
Petitioners accept Ancient York Masonry. One ought not condemn
our Grand
Lodge Officials for this. They were simply reestablishing strict
control
following the stormy period of Anti-Masonic politics already
referred to,
in which Masonry had been in disrepute. With control at the top
weakened
or (in some states) missing altogether, it should not surprise
us that there
should have been conflict between "Ancients" and "Moderns."
As Lodge No. 106 itself strengthened,
some of its aggressive Members
felt that New York Masons should be
excluded. Therefore, "Moderns"
saw less prospect of
identification with a local Masonic organization. As
1866 dawned, the Grand Master suggested to the minority faction
in Lodge
106 that the unwanted newcomers could obtain a Masonic home of
their
own, if they would simply accept Ancient York Masonry. At last
the dissidents
capitulated.
Thus it was that
on April 25, 1867, Brothers James Goodlander, Lumberman
(Lodge No. 106); Charles D. Brewer, Jr., Attorney (Charity Lodge
No. 144); Benjamin S. Bentley, Jr., Attorney (P. M. of
Warren Lodge No.
240); Monroe D.
Hotchkiss, Lumberman (Genoa Lodge No. 421, N.Y.);
Frederick G.
Thorn, Architect (Lodge No. 106); Josiah Evans, Jr., Merchant
Tailor (Lodge No. 116); Samuel Van Gilder, Lumberman
(Lodge No. 106);
Frederick H.
Keller, Leather Dealer (Lancaster Lodge No. 43); and Frank
J. Deemer,
Clerk (Union Lodge No. 291), assembled in the anteroom of
Lodge No. 106 and decided upon the formation of Ivy Lodge. Later the
group
elected Brother James Goodlander their Worshipful Master,
Brother Charles D. Brewer their Senior Warden, Brother B.S.
Bentley their Junior Warden, Brother Frederick G. Thorn their
Secretary, and Brother Monroe D. Hotchkiss their Treasurer.
Brothers Brewer and Thorn were designated
a Committee to
Petition Grand Lodge for the necessary Warrant.
Concerning our Warrant Master, Brother
James Goodlander, P.M.,
we can say little. The
date and place of his birth are unknown. Though
Brother Manson
wrote that his Masonic origin was uncertain, the Anniversary
History of Lodge No. 106 discloses that he was made a Mason in
that body
on April 30, 1856. In 1863 and 64, he was elected Secretary, and
served
Lodge No. 106 as Worshipful Master in 1866. Immediately
thereafter he
withdrew, to become the first Worshipful Master of Ivy Lodge No.
397.
He came to Lycoming County from
Milton, Pa., and took up residence
in Montoursville as a cabinetmaker. Later he
operated the West Branch
Saw and Planing Mill in Williamsport. We also
learn that in 1868 he became
the second Eminent Commander of Baldwin II Commandry No.
22, Knight
Templar, in Williamsport. And he entered
Lycoming Royal Arch Chapter
No. 222 as a Charter Member, in 1869. A few
years later he apparently
moved from the community, and dropped
entirely out of sight. When and
where he died is also
unknown.
Because of Brother Goodlander's
successful defeat of the reactionaries
in Lodge No. 106, he must
be credited with having done more for Freemasonry in
Williamsport than any other Mason, to pave the way for the
general growth and popularity that Masonry has experienced here
since his
day. He was a businessman, clear headed, progressive, liberal,
and resourceful
in action. He believed ardently that Williamsport needed more
Masonry,
and he saw no good in an endless controversy
that promised no remedy for conditions detrimental to the
community and also to the Craft.
The first meeting hall, selected by
Brothers Evans, Hotchkiss, Deemer,
Thorn, and Brewer, was in
the Dubois Building, leased by the founders
on or about May 8, 1867. But things were not going well, there
still being
undercover opposition within Lodge No. 106, brought about by
tensions
and jealousies. The Committee appointed by Lodge No. 106's
separating
Members failed to act properly upon the Warrant question, being
dissuaded
there from, apparently, by another faction. However, at its
Stated Meeting
April 18, 1867, Lodge No. 106 formally endorsed the new Petition
to Grand Lodge for the Warrant, together with Eureka Lodge No.
335, Montoursville,
which had appended its own endorsement thereon as of April 17,
1867.
On May 8th, Deputy Grand Master, Brother Richard Vaux, visited
Lodge
No. 106 for Instruction, and advised Ivy's founders that their
Warrant Committee
still had not acted.
What
had actually happened here will probably never truly be
known.
It now became the turn of Grand Lodge to go inactive on the
proposal.
No action followed for several months, and the Trustees gave
up their lease
of the new Lodge room. Brother Goodlander, exasperated, did
the best he
could. Among the files of Grand Lodge is a brief note he
wrote them, under
date August 16, 1867, addressed to Brother John Thompson,
Esq., Grand
Secretary. It reads: "Dear Sir, As we have been assured that
our Charter
would be granted, had it not been withdrawn, I have simply
to say that
the papers are still with you, and the application subject
to your consideration. J
You can do as you please with it. Fraternally yours, James
Goodlander."
We are also told that Brother Goodlander
personally traveled to Harrisburg
and attended upon Grand Lodge to present the Petition.
We should emphasize that Brother Goodlander was not a native
Williamsporter,
and therefore his viewpoint was that of the outsider looking
in, able to see things more precisely. From this stemmed his
influence with
Grand Lodge Officials. After a summer of further
politicking, the Grand
Lodge at last granted the Warrant on September 5, 1867, and
Constitution
followed on September 28, 1867.
Some justification for the long controversy may be found in
an address
delivered before Grand Lodge late in 1867 by Grand Master
Vaux, when
he said, "I have visited Pennsylvania Lodges in which it was
impossible
to know to what Order they belonged, due to the character
and style of
the ceremonials there exhibited."
The results of Brother Goodlander's victory over the Old
Familiars
were immediately evident. And the reapproachment improved
both the civic
and social life of our community. Another earnest and
successful worker
for peace and harmony during this formative period was
Brother Frederick
H. Keller, a newcomer himself, who later became Mayor of the
city.
There were at last two rival Lodges in Williamsport. The
healthy competition this brought about caused each to
subordinate differences. In very
early years, Lodge No.
106 and Ivy Lodge No. 397 took to celebrating
St. John's
Day together. Later, when Lodges No. 707 and No. 755 came upon the scene,
all four Lodges opened their doors each to the other. This
unique interdependence
has proved to be a distinct boon to Williamsport Masonry. So
it can be said that its true start, its greatest impetus,
came when there were
at last two Lodges. Today there are no greater influences
for peace and
harmony in Williamsport than those emanating from our
Fraternal Bodies.
Back to Top
An Historical Review
Nine Members and thirteen visitors attended the first
meeting of Ivy
Lodge No. 397 after Constitution. According to the 1867
By-laws, the fee
for Initiation and Membership was fixed at $50.00. And it
was further
provided that every Member admitted upon certificate should
pay $10.00
if a Master Mason, $20.00 if a Fellowcraft Mason, and $35.00
if an Entered
Apprentice. A By-laws Committee was set up, and two
Petitions received.
After St. John's Day, 1867, Ivy Lodge No. 397 had one Past
Master (Goodlander)
and a Membership of thirteen.
Special Meetings to Confer Degrees became the rule in 1868,
during
which year Ivy Lodge No. 397 had thirty-two such meetings.
Also, the two
Lodges removed to shared quarters in the Ayers and Lundy
Building above
the new Post Office. This move ended a period of
controversy in which
an Ivy Lodge faction had tried to get Lodge
No. 106 to vacate.
Up to this time the two Lodges shared their paraphernalia.
But after
conflict arose concerning location of the meeting hall, Ivy
Lodge obtained
its own Jewels, furniture, and fixtures. By-laws were
finally adopted later
in the year, and Membership increased to twenty-seven.
In 1869, it was decided that Ivy Lodge would meet at 7:00
P.M. Oct.
1 to May 1, and 7:30 P.M. during the summer. Membership
climbed to
forty-three.
A curious item appears in the minutes of 1870. A Second
Degree was
being administered, and when the Master asked if there were
any objections,
a visiting Member from Lodge No. 106 arose and made
objection. The
Master referred the problem to the District Deputy, who
ruled that the
objection was not obligatory upon Ivy Lodge.
The Initiation fee was now amended to $40.00 and a sinking
fund created
against indebtedness, a portion of all Dues and fees to be
placed therein.
There having been trouble with the Treasurer's books this
year, that Officer
was placed under bond. Membership gained seventeen.
Finances continued to give trouble in 1871. A special
committee reported
that the Secretary had paid all funds received by him over
to the Treasurer,
who muddled his accounts. By resolution, the Treasurer was
required to
pay over to the Trustees all money exceeding $100.00. During
this year
a switch was made from written to printed monthly notices,
except that the
names of Petitioners were still required to be handwritten
therein. Net
membership at year's end was sixty-four.
1872 was the first "off year." There was a net loss in
Membership,
due to several expulsions and one resignation. Mention
is made in the minutes
of a proposed Masonic Home in Pittsburgh.
In 1873, due to poor attendance upon meetings in hot
weather, the
practice began of suspending meetings for the summer
months, upon majority
vote of the Members present at any Stated Meeting.
Membership reached
sixty-six; two admitted, three Initiated, one expelled,
and one Demitted.
Ivy Lodge became debt-ridden, though a considerable sum
of money stood in the Trustees' hands. Heretofore, the
Lodge tried to cover its debts
without using invested funds, but this year a resolution
was adopted requiring
the
Trustees to pay the Treasurer enough to meet all
obligations. Net
Membership shrank to sixty-five. The biggest social
event of the year was
a Grand Lodge
Visitation on October 6, 1874, by R.W. Grand Master
Alfred R.
Potter. Members of ten Lodges attended the program.
1875 saw ten Special Meetings. Five Members were Raised,
producing
total net Membership to sixty-six. Clandestine Masonry
was the big
issue this year. Grand Lodge had suspended several
Lodges for admitting
such Masons. A proposal was made to combine with Lodge
No. 106 in
setting up a Masonic Library and Reading Room, but we
are told that this
was abandoned because of the expense.
The years 1876 and 1877 were uneventful, though John B.
Metzger, later President Judge of Lycoming County
Courts, and Hiram H. Ulman,
later President of Select Council in Wllliamsport, were
made Members of the Lodge those years. In 1878, Brother
Addis McVeagh, P.M., died, and
net Membership at year's end was seventy. Joint
celebration of St. John's Day had now begun.
In 1879, various Grand Lodge Decisions affecting Lodge
records and
procedures were clarified. In 1880, Ivy Lodge received
more Petitions and
Raised more Applicants than in any previous year, but
suffered many losses,
and net Membership slipped to fifty-eight.
From 1881 through 1883, the minutes contain nothing of
interest, except
that in the last named year, for the first time, a
Candidate was stopped after
receiving the Fellowcraft Degree. In 1884, attention was
directed to the
establishment of a School for Instruction, jointly for
the two Lodges. Also,
mention is made of presentation to the Lodge of a Gavel
made of wood
from an oak tree on the George Washington estate at Mt.
Vernon, Va.
The two Lodges moved to new meeting halls in the Hays
Building in 1885. In November, a By-law was adopted
setting up the first Tuesday of
each month as the Stated Meeting night. It has always
remained so.
From 1886 through 1889 there is repeated mention in the
minutes concerning
organizing efforts by competing branches of Masonry.
Declared
Clandestine by Grand Lodge in 1887 and 1888 were the
Cerneau Masons,
and in 1890 the so-called Egyptian Rite sought foothold
in the State. The
Grand Master attacked this group also as Clandestine.
1892, the year of our Twenty-fifth Anniversary, was
prosperous. Also,
iS93.
The seasons 1894 through 1896 are characterized in the
minutes as
"prosperous," "ordinary," and "some recovery." Poor
economic conditions
had clouded Masonry's financial picture, and it became
difficult to
collect dues money. In 1897, Ivy Lodge received
twenty-six Petitions and
Raised twenty-three.
In 1897, the Cornerstone of the present Masonic Temple
was laid. In
1898, twenty-one were Raised, and Ivy Lodge moved to the
new building
on May 3rd. On July 17, the Lodges assisted at the
Cornerstone Laying
for the
"Home for the Friendless."
Membership gained once again in 1899, and depression set
in the following
year. In 1901, Brother Frederick J. Keller, P.M.,
Treasurer for
twenty-eight years, died. In 1902, thirty-six Petitions
were received and eighteen were Raised. In 1903,
twenty-five were Raised.
Death visited among the veterans again in 1904, when
Brother Herman
Hinckley, P.M., Secretary for twenty-five years, died.
Twenty-eight Petitions
were received that year and sixteen were Raised. Brother
Adolph Niemeyer, P.M., who had served as Secretary and
Trustee for four and
twenty-four years respectively, died November 30, 1905.
This year thirty-four
Petitions came in, and twenty-six were Raised.
1906 saw the death of Brother Dr. Newall Johnson, P.M.
There were
twenty-six Petitions and twenty-two were Raised. In
1907, we had twenty-seven
Petitioners, sixteen of whom were Raised. In 1908,
Brother John
G. Hess became District Deputy Grand Master. Among the
deaths were
Brothers Edward W. Till, Valentine Luppert, and P.M.
John F. Tomlinson.
There were twenty-nine Petitions and seventeen Raised.
Two more P.M.'s died in 1909, Brothers William M. DuFour
and
William T. Corson. The minutes show that twenty-seven
Master's Degrees
were Conferred that year.
Brother Monroe D. Hotchkiss, Trustee
for thirty years, died in 1910.
There were thirty-eight
Petitions and twenty-nine Third Degrees. Nothing
much is noted for
1911, during which year twenty-seven Petitions came
in, and twenty-five were Raised. Mention is made in the
minutes that Brother
James B. Krause, P.M., became Right Worshipful Grand
Warden this year.
1912 produced nothing notable except a
Grand Lodge Visitation. Only
nineteen Petitions were filed, and
ten Master Masons created. In 1913, when
Williamsport
High School was built, the various Lodges in the city
participated. Brother William H. Kiess, P.M., died.
There were eighteen Petitions
and twelve were
Raised.
Brother John G. Hess, District Deputy
Grand Master, died in 1914.
Only fourteen were Raised, but
thirty-five Petitions came in. 1915 was one
of the most active years
in Lodge history, when forty-one Petitions were filed
and thirty-five were Raised.
In 1916, there were thirty-six
Petitions and thirty-two Raised. World
War I was raging, and
Lodge activity persisted, as in 1917, when twenty-six
were Raised. In 1918, Brother James B. Krause became
Right Worshipful
Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. He
visited frequently.
Ivy Lodge contributed generously to the Grand Lodge War
Fund. Forty-two
Petitions were filed, and twenty-seven Master Masons
created.
In 1919, the total Membership of Ivy
Lodge No. 397 reached five
hundred and fifty-three. This was the
busiest year in history for the Brethren,
there being
fifty-two Petitions and forty-three Third Degrees.
Prosperity
continued in 1920, when the Lodge received a bequest of
$25,000.00 from
the estate of Brother Alfred F. Young, P.M., who had
been Representative
to Grand Lodge for nineteen years. As for new Petitions,
all previous records
were broken, as our minutes reveal seventy-five
Petitions, and forty-three
Master Masons created.
Brother Frederick H. Sweet, P.M. and
Trustee, died January 5, 1921.
Brother Albert F. Zimmerman, P.M.,
was elected to the vacancy. Total
Membership now achieved
six hundred and forty-four, and our minutes say that
forty-eight Petitions came in, and fifty were Raised. In
1922, Membership was six hundred and
seventy-four, and in 1924 it reached six hundred
and ninety. The
Manson historical notes reveal nothing else of interest
for
these years, except the number of Raisings: forty-three
in 1922, nineteen
in 1923, and twenty-six in 1924.
As the Twenties wore on, interest in
Masonry appeared to decline, no doubt from the "multiplied diversity
of attraction of social and other pleasures," as
Brother Manson so aptly puts it. For instance, only
thirteen Master
Masons were created in 1926, seventeen in 1927, and
eighteen in 1928,
at the close of which year Membership was seven hundred
and thirteen.
For the next three years, nothing is
recorded except Petitions and Raisings. Total Membership
hovered around seven hundred and eighteen, but
by 1930 the Great
Depression had taken hold, so that only fourteen
Petitions
were received. In 1931, just four Petitions were filed,
and four Raised.
Membership plummeted. In 1932, there was even less
activity, there being
only two Petitions, and but three Raised. This proved to
be the low point.
In 1933, together with the famous Bank Holiday,
financial conditions reached
their nadir. All Lodge funds were frozen, and securities
had to be sold to get money for Lodge charities. Many
Members became delinquent, and
monthly attendance fell badly. In October, the Trustees
had to sell $500.00
in investments, just to meet current bills. Many
resignations were received.
Total enrollment shrank to six hundred and fifty-nine at
year's end. A Budget
Committee was appointed to curtail expenditures.
The decline continued through 1934,
when resignations reduced Membership still further. In 1935, the
Lodge received final payment of the Charles
H. Eldon bequest, which
came to $2,398.45. Property in the hands of the
Trustees increased
to $16,198.10, and net Membership went to six hundred
and thirty-two. Unpaid dues climbed to $2,620.25.
From 1936 through 1939 these
financial crises continued. In general,
these seasons were
uneventful, characterized by poor attendance. Sometimes,
say the minutes, we had more visitors present than our
own Members. In 1939, due to an upsurge in expulsions
and suspensions, only five hundred
and eighty-six Members were in Good Standing. Brother J.
Fred Katzmaier became Representative to Grand Lodge. At
last, in 1940, finances recovered
to the point where expenses were about $750.00 less than
income.
With the entry of America into World
War II in December, 1941, Ivy
Lodge No. 397 took action
as to procedures for closing Lodge, in the event
of an air raid alert. We celebrated our Seventy-fifth
Anniversary Year, it
being the administration of Brother Ralph C. Gingrich,
P.M.
Business was brisk in 1942 and 1943,
there being fifty-nine Petitions.
Because of the increased
work load, Ivy Lodge No. 397 discontinued the
practice of summer
recesses this year. According to the Committee on
Masonic Military and Naval Service, there were thirty
Brothers actively
serving in the Armed
Forces, and also forty-two sons or daughters of Members.
A Committee composed of Brothers J. Fred Katzmaier,
P.M., Russell
M. Smith, P.M., and Emerson L. Woolever, Secretary,
made fifty-four
personal contacts and wrote six hundred and
fifty-seven letters to Armed
Forces personnel.
In 1944, Brother Arthur L. Pepperman became District
Deputy Grand
Master. There were fifty Petitions during that year.
Brother Frank Borger,
Junior Warden, was called into the service, and
during his absence Brother
Howard R. Baldwin was appointed Acting Junior
Warden. Annual Visitations
with Ivy Lodge No. 397, Elmira, New York, were
resumed this season.
1945 brought in fifty-five Petitions, and according
to Brother Kenneth
Weaver, P.M., seventy-one were Raised, this being
the all-time record.
Brother John A. Shoemaker, Treasurer, marked his
fiftieth year as a P.M.
In a memorable ceremony, Brother Shoemaker, who had
Raised Brother
Charles A. Shemp on February 4, 1896, presented "Bucky"
Shemp with
his 50-year Masonic Service Emblem.
Activity slowed somewhat over the following four
years. In 1947, there
were thirty-nine Petitions, and only twenty-six in
1949, then forty-nine in
1950. The year, 1948, saw Brother Ralph C. Gingrich
appointed District Deputy Grand Master and in 1950,
Brother John A. Shoemaker resigned
as Treasurer, after having served in that office for
nearly fifty years.
Mention should be made of the part that Members of
Ivy Lodge No.
397 had in the Constitution of Dietrick Lamade Lodge
No. 755, which took place in Williamsport on October
11, 1947. Participating on the Organizing
Committee for Lodge No.
755 were four Brothers of Ivy Lodge. These
were Brothers B. Frank
Borger, W.M.; L. Eugene Graham, S.W.; Emerson Woolever, Sec.; and
Ralph C. Gingrich, P.M.
And the following Members of Ivy Lodge No. 397
separated there from to become Warrant Members of
Dietrick Lamade Lodge No. 755:
Brothers William H. Schrum (first Junior Deacon);
Dietrick Lamade JJ (first
Junior Master of Ceremonies); George R. Lamade;
Ralph M. Lamade;
George R. Fleming; George R. Nelson; Howard J.
Lamade, Jr. (member
of the Instruction Committee); George M. Dieffenbach;
John Budd Lamade;
Charles A. Dawson; Kenneth D. Rhone (member of
Instruction Committee);
Joseph C. Showers; Charles D. Lamade; Howard J.
Lamade, Sr. (Trustee);
George L. Stearns II (Trustee); and David D. Geesey)
Chairman of Instruction
Committee).
The years 1951-55 produced little of arresting
interest. Of course, we
have the onward rush of Petitions: thirty-nine in
1951, twenty-eight in 1952,
thirty in 1953, twenty-six in 1954, and twenty-one
in 1955. At the Stated
Meeting for January 3, 1956, it was resolved to set
aside $1.00 per year per full Dues-paying Member to
build up a 100th Anniversary Fund. In March 1957,
the Lodge suffered another regrettable loss, when
Brother
Emerson L. Woolever, P.M.
and Secretary, died. There were twenty-eight
Petitions in 1956
and nineteen in 1957.
Twenty-six Petitions were filed in 1958, fourteen in
1959 and 1960, eighteen in 1961, twenty-two in 1962,
fourteen in 1963, fifteen in 1964,
twenty-five in 1965, and thirty-one in 1966.
May 25, 1967 was another important date in our grand
history. Our Lodge had its 100th Anniversary, and we
were pleased to have Brother
Hiram P. Ball, RWGM, as our honored guest.
From the years of 1968 through 1972, we continued to
have banner
years for Petitions. 1968 produced twenty-five, in
1969 we had eight, 1970
we had sixteen, 1971 we had fourteen, and in 1972 we
had twenty-seven.
On February 2, 1972, all of the Williamsport Lodges
passed a motion to put air-conditioning in the Lodge
Room. Over the years this has proved to have been a
valuable asset in providing comfort to our Members
during
the hot days of spring and fall.
From 1973 to 1986 we continued to be a leader in
Petitions, having received a total of one hundred
forty-six.
On November 3, 1984, Ivy Lodge was again honored
with a visit from
Brother William A. Carpenter, RWGM. At this
Visitation, the families of
the Members were present and all had a glorious
time.
From 1985 to the present we have had continued
growth, with an
addition of sixty-five new Members.
Ivy Lodge was instrumental in organizing the first
District-wide St.
John's Day celebration. Ivy Lodge, with the
assistance of the other District
Lodges, assisted LaBelle Valle Lodge No. 232, in
making the first annual
Bloodmobile, sponsored by the Masons, a great
success.
Our Lodge is continues serving the community both
Masonically and civilly, by volunteering time and
making donations to the cause of various charitable
organizations. We look forward to the future
and serving with pride in the years to come.
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